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Saint John's Canaport LNG facility — New Brunswick's most expensive piece of property — continues to grow in value, but its taxes are holding steady because of an eight-year-old property tax deal it cut with the city.

The liquid natural gas terminal is New Brunswick's most valuable piece of assessed property at just under $300 million.

The facility's value grew $4.3 million this year, on top of a $4.4-million increase last year.

The value of the Canaport LNG terminal appears to being increasing a few million dollars each year, says Shawn Peterson of the website propertize.ca. (SaintJohnShawn.com)

A 25-year property tax deal struck by former Saint John mayor Norm McFarlane for the LNG development froze its bill at $500,000 a year.

The property tax deal caused protests in the city for weeks.

Eight years later the gap between LNG and other facilities continues to grow.

By comparison, the Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station now pays $5.8 million in property tax — 12 times more than the LNG terminal — even though its assessment is $66 million lower.

"I'm assuming they're sending someone down each and every year to determine what the value is and it seems to be going up a few million dollars each and every year," says Shawn Peterson, who runs the propertize.ca, a website that provides searchable tax assessment information.

Peterson said provincial assessors do keep track of the LNG plant, although, in the end, it's salt in the wound for a city forbidden from cashing in on its growing property value.

Last month, former Liberal premier Frank McKenna said the LNG plant may yet trigger an economic rebirth for Saint John, well beyond the modest annual contribution it makes to the city's tax haul.